Posts Tagged ‘Tyler Thigpen’

Brandon Marshall admitted he came into the Pro Bowl with the goal of winning the MVP award, calling it his Playoff game.

After catching a Pro Bowl record four touchdowns — two less than he had during the entire regular season — to go with 176 receiving yards, Marshall had his wish, driving out of the stadium with a brand-new SUV as his prize. Marshall joined Ricky Williams (2002) and Garo Yepremian (1973) as the third Dolphin to earn the honor.

Sure, Marshall’s impressive statistics can be viewed as meaningless when the two teams combined to score 100 points, but just look at the highlight-reel catches the Dolphins wide receiver made in the game. One TD came when he was able to keep his concentration after the ball sailed through two defenders and bounced off Marshall’s own foot. On his final score, he once again caught the ball in traffic, twisting his body in the back of the end zone and dragging both feet inbounds while being held by the defender.

When he was interviewed mid-game by NBC sideline reporter Alex Flanagan, Marshall wasted no time in crediting the Pro Bowl quarterbacks for making spectacular plays, simultaneously throwing every Dolphins signal caller under the bus.

“Down in Miami, getting a feel for different quarterbacks — had three or four of them throughout my two years there — and the (Pro Bowl) quarterbacks make it easy for me,” he said. “These guys are just putting it in the right places and I’m making the plays, so it’s easy right now.”

If you’re counting, the “three or four” Miami QBs would be Matt Moore, Chad Henne, Tyler Thigpen and Chad Pennington (for a few snaps), as well as J.P. Losman, for good measure. And just in case he wasn’t abundantly clear the first time around, Marshall reiterated that the Pro Bowl quarterbacks were responsible for his MVP performance after the game.

“Since Jay Cutler (with the Denver Broncos), I’ve had a few different quarterbacks, and being in the Pro Bowl, you have these elite quarterbacks you’re playing with,” he said. “It’s all them — they put (the ball) in the right spots and it’s easy for me to make the catch.”

It’s not that Marshall is factually wrong, since the five Dolphins QBs he’s played with were mostly mediocre. But Marshall didn’t exactly help matters, dropping 12 passes (officially) during 2011 season and making countless mistakes on the field. It should also be noted that Moore finished 12th in the NFL in Passer Rating, and that Marshall caught 59 passes for 901 yards and five TDs in Moore’s 12 starts.

It’s obvious that Marshall, as well as owner Stephen Ross and every Dolphins fan, want an upgrade at the QB position. But calling out his teammates on national television with a wide grin — especially since there’s still a chance that Moore could be back next season — isn’t the right time or place to make his point or help the organization in its search. Marshall’s acrobatic catches and record-setting numbers speak much louder than his words for any interested free agents.

Marshall also chose to praise former Dolphins head coach Tony Sparano while referring to Joe Philbin simply as, “the new coach.” Make of that what you will.

“When you look at what Coach Sparano was able to do, the foundation was built. A lot of people don’t give him enough credit, but we have a solid locker room, high character guys and leadership there,” said Marshall when asked about the Dolphins’ future. “The new coach coming in, he’s inheriting a strong team.”

It’ll be interesting to see who that team will add to throw the ball to the never-outspoken MVP-winner.

Now that the New York Jets have been eliminated from the Playoffs and we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief, itâ€™s time to think about whatâ€™s next for the Miami Dolphins. Â Letâ€™s take a look back at where it all went wrong in 2010 and make some very early predictions for 2011 (presuming weâ€™ll actually have an NFL season). In the coming weeks, Iâ€™ll break down key free agents whoâ€™d look great in aqua and orange next season.

Anyone who watched even a handful of series doesnâ€™t need to look at advanced metrics to know Miamiâ€™s offense was dreadful. The Dolphins, expected to be a dominant run-first team after having the fourth-best rushing offense in 2009, tied for 29th in rushing TDs (8) and 21st in rushing yards (1,643), while also coming in 27th in passing TDs (17) and fourth in interceptions (21). While WRs Brandon Marshall, Davone Bess, and Brian Hartline, as well as TE Anthony Fasano (signed to an extension through 2012), form a solid and dependable aerial attack, the same canâ€™t be said for just about every other member of the offense. So who should and likely will be back in 2011?

It turns out I â€“ as well as everyone who threw away money on a Henne jersey â€“ was wrong about the supposed QB of the future. After showing promise at the end of the 2009 season and having a Pro Bowl WR at his disposal, Henne was expected to take a step forward and improve his decision-making. After throwing three picks in a crushing loss to the Baltimore Ravens in Week 9, Henne was benched in favor of Chad Pennington, and was then once again pulled for Tyler Thigpen in an embarrassing season-ending loss to the Patriots. Over the last 12 games, Henne threw 12 TDs and 18 INTs, and posted a QB Rating under 60.0 in four of his final eight appearances.

While most Dolphins fans never want to see him on the field again, itâ€™s almost a given that Miami will keep the still 25-year-old QB for another year. Itâ€™s even possible that heâ€™ll get a chance to compete for a backup spot with a veteran QB â€“ Kyle Orton? Donovan McNabb? Er, Brady Quinn? â€“ in training camp if the team doesnâ€™t draft a QB in the first round of the Draft. Either way, itâ€™s become clear that Henne is not the long-term solution as the Dolphins starter.

2011 Prediction: 1,127 passing yards, 5 TDs, 6 INT

Tyler Thigpen, QB: Thigpen was horrendous in his lone start against the Bears, a 16-0Â shutoutÂ at home (albeit he was missing half of his offense), and finished the year with 435 passing yards (53.2% completion percentage), two TDs, and two picks. While he has mobility and can make plays out of the pocket, he’s unlikely to receive anything more than a training camp invite from Miami.

Chad Pennington, QB: I wish Pennington all the best with his return from a fourth shoulder surgery, but considering that he played two snaps in 2010 before getting hurt again, the odds arenâ€™t in his favor. In an ideal world, heâ€™d become the Dolphinsâ€™ QB coach, but I have a feeling heâ€™ll go back to where it all started and take Mark Brunellâ€™s clipboard job in New York.

On the surface, my prediction looks fairly accurate, since Brown gained only 58 fewer yards from scrimmage and managed to play all 16 games for only the second time in his career. The problem is that Brown averaged a career-low 3.7 yards per attempt, didnâ€™t have a single 100-yard rushing game, and his 45.9 yards per game were the lowest of any player with at least 200 carries. The soon-to-be-30-year-old is an unrestricted free agent who hasnâ€™t been offered a contract by the Dolphins and has probably already cleaned out his locker

No one expected Ricky to even come close to matching his gaudy 2009 numbers (1,121 rushing yards, 13 TDs), but 2010 was certainly a disappointing season for the 33-year-old running back. Still, Williams averaged 4.2 yards per carry and busted off a 45-yard scamper, showing he has plenty left in those legs. After he recently bashed Coach Sparano and the organization, it doesnâ€™t sound like heâ€™ll be back in Miami next season either, and Iâ€™ll be shocked if he doesnâ€™t sign with the Jets or Patriots just to stick it to the Dolphins.

Patrick Cobbs / Lex Hilliard / Lousaka Polite, RB: Â Forget what I projected — guess who was the Finsâ€™ third-leading rusher last season? Yep, Thigpen with a whopping 73 yards. Short-yardage specialist Polite managed to get 62 rushing yards and his first career TD, while Cobbs and Hilliard played mainly on special teams and combined for exactly zero rushing yards on four carries. The coaching staff reportedly loves Cobbs, and Polite converts on third-and-one situations as well as anyone in the league, so their roles are unlikely to change in 2011.
Hilliard, however, could opt for more playing time, especially with the impending return of the speedy Kory Sheets.

With a short week and injuries to both Chad Pennigton and Chad Henne, Tyler Thigpen is in line to make his first start as a Miami Dolphin.

It’s probably safe to assume that most Fins fans don’t know all thatÂ much about the team’sÂ newest quarterback.Â He’s been the third-stringer behind Pennington, Henne, and (sigh) Pat White ever since he was acquired from the Kansas City Chiefs in September 2009, and had throw only one touchdown and three interceptions for Miami prior to last week.Â In his most extensive game action to date, he threw two costly picks in a winnable game against the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 17 of 2009.

A mistake-prone QB going up against the Chicago Bears’ fourth-ranked defense that’s tied for the NFL lead with 14 interceptions on the season isn’t exactly a recipe for success, but that doesn’t mean that Thigpen can’t get the job done.

In 2008, Thigpen wasn’t just good in his final ten games for the Chiefs (we’ll conveniently ignore his first careerÂ start) — he was one of the best QBs in the NFL.Â Â No seriously, take a look at these numbers fromÂ Weeks 7 throughÂ 17 of that season.

Player

Comp %

Pass Yds

Pass TD

INT

Total TD

Drew Brees

63.5%

3,396

25

11

25

Philip Rivers

67.1%

2,826

23

7

23

Aaron Rodgers

63.8%

2,764

19

9

21

Kurt Warner

66.0%

3,111

20

10

20

Peyton Manning

68.6%

2,700

19

7

20

Matt Cassel

62.8%

2,783

18

7

20

Tyler Thigpen

57.8%

2,292

16

8

20

Donovan McNabb

58.8%

2,620

17

9

19

Jay Cutler

60.9%

3,024

15

14

17

Tony Romo

59.7%

2,080

15

9

15

Chad Pennington

67.0%

2,552

14

5

15

Eli Manning

58.6%

2,010

14

6

14

Joe Flacco

58.8%

2,127

13

5

14

David Garrard

61.7%

2,637

12

9

13

Matt Ryan

64.0%

2,577

12

8

13

Only five perennial Pro-Bowlers and a QB playing with Randy Moss and Wes Welker at his disposal found the enzone more times.Â The aggressive Thigpen threw the eighth-most TDs — three fewer than Peyton Manning and Aaron Rodgers — rushed for 386 yards and three more scores, and even caught a 37-yard TD pass.Â Of course, the second-year player made his share of errors, and Kansas City lost 10 of the 11 games he started (though six of those contests were decided by seven points or less).Â The spectacular numbers apparenty weren’t good enough for the Chiefs, whoÂ opted to trade forÂ theÂ marginally-betterÂ Matt Cassel and keep the legendary Brodie Croyle as the backup QB.

Last week, I speculated that Thigpen would get an extended look towards the end of the season to see if he can be the Dolphins latestÂ QB of the future.Â Miami hung on to him during the offseason despite getting plenty of offers, and insteadÂ cut ties with White, a 2009Â second-round pick.Â Don’t be surprised if the underrated Thigpen seizes the opportunity andÂ establishes an immediate rapport with Brandon Marshall on Thursday night.Â

At the very least, let’s hope he can make it throughÂ the game — I really don’t want to have to write anything positive about Patrick Ramsey.

A little over a year ago, when Miami started 0-3 and Pennington averaged only 138 passing yards per contest while committing four turnovers, the fansÂ wanted him benched in favor of the up-and-coming Henne.Â 21 games later, there’s a growing sense of excitement about Pennington’s return to the field as a 4-4 team clings to its fading Playoff hopes.

According to beat writer Omar Kelly, the coaching staffÂ felt that “Henne had become extremely predictable,” leading toÂ decreasedÂ confidence in locker room.Â Henne made too many bad decisions and committed far too many costlyÂ turnovers, throwing four interceptions without a single touchdown pass in Miami’s last two games.Â Whether he’s still the Dolphins QB of the future remains to be seen,Â butÂ it’s certainly not inconceivable thatÂ TylerÂ ThigpenÂ will get an extended look later this year or during the offseason.

Offensive coordinator Dan Henningâ€™s play calling has certainly raised a lot of validÂ questions, since his system has been more tailored to Pennington’s “water pistol” arm all along.Â Henne averaged 6.9 yards per pass attempt and 10.8 yards per completion his season, both of which are below Pennington’s career averages.Â After three surgeries on his throwing shoulder, Pennington doesn’t have the arm strength to throw deepÂ passes, but then again, Henne has only two completions of over 40 yards in eight games.

One factor that can’t be understated is Pennington’s accuracy, which is miles ahead of Henne’s.Â Pennington holds the highest completion percentage (66.1%) in NFL history among players with at least 1,000 pass attempts, and led the NFL in that category during his last full season in 2008 (67.4%).Â He has the 12th-best careerÂ Passer Rating (90.1), and ranked second in the leagueÂ behind Phillip RiversÂ two years ago.Â Â While Henne has thrownÂ four more INTsÂ than TDs, Pennington has nearly twice as many scores as picks over 11 years (though it should be noted thatÂ he threw four costly INTs against the RavensÂ in Miami’s last Playoff game).

It’ll be interesting to see how the 34-year-old fares against the Tennessee Titans defense,Â which hasÂ given up the 10th most passing yards but leads the league withÂ 3.3 sacks per game.Â Â Â If Pennington improbably leads Miami back into the postseason, heÂ deserves to winÂ an unprecedented third Comeback Player of the Year Award.

By now,Â you’ve probably heard that much-maligned Dolphins quarterback Pat White has been shown his walking papers after one disastrous season in which heÂ became just the fourth QB to not complete a single pass with at least five attempts since the 1970 AFL-NFLÂ merger.Â Â It’s hard to argue that it was theÂ wrong decision, especially with three better-qualified players ahead of him on the depth chart, but I’mÂ a little dismayed by how the situation was handled by the coaching staff.

Pat was White trash to the Dolphins... (Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

The Dolphins never gave White much of a chance to succeed.Â During the regular season, he was insertedÂ into theÂ occasionalÂ “Wildcat” formation in which he could never fully show what he had to offer aside from scrambling on the ground.Â In the final game, he was thrown into the fire against a stout Pittsburgh Steelers defense in the thick of the Playoff hunt.Â And then,Â in the 2010 preseason, White took nine total snaps (none in the fourth game), kneeling down three times and throwing (and completing!) four short passes in garbage time.

It’s clear that the Dolphins front office was convinced that White wasn’tÂ part of the team’s future plans before the preseason started and didn’t bother to give him an extended look or attempt to increase his trade value for QB-needy teams.Â Â And that’s the part that I’ll never understand.Â The Dolphins are hardly the first team to give up on an early-round draft pick — hell, the Arizona Cardinals released Matt Leinart, the 10th overall selection in 2006 — but the fact that White wasn’t on the field forÂ even a single quarterÂ at the expense of injury-prone veteran Chad Pennington, who hardly needed the extra work, or given the opportunity to battle Tyler Thigpen for the third QB spot doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Of course, White isn’t without fault himself.Â There have been indications that his heart wasn’t fully into football after he took a vicious hit that knocked him unconsciousÂ duringÂ last year’sÂ finale.Â Despite possessing the quickness (4.44 in the 40-yard dash at the NFLÂ combine)Â and shiftiness that would make him well-suited to play part-time wide receiver, a laÂ Brad SmithÂ and Joshua Cribbs,Â White refused to switch positions and indicated that he’d rather play baseball.Â Those aren’t exactly the kind of words that management wants to hear out of players on the roster bubble.

Be that as it may, White is gone and somewhat surprisingly, wasn’t claimed off waivers despite having most of his 2010 salary paid by the Dolphins.Â I askedÂ Sun-Sentinel reporter Omar Kelly to do some NFL Betting on where White will end up — the CFL, the New England Patriots, or the New York Yankees.Â KellyÂ didn’t even rule out a full retirement from football to be a “regular Joe” in White’s hometown.

Other News and Notes:

*Did the Dolphins think they could save someÂ money by releasing TE David Martin and then re-signing him after the first week?Â It’s hard to believe Miami was prepared to rely on John Nalbone, whoÂ entered training camp fourth on the depth chart and didn’t blow anyone away during preseason, in its two tight end packages.Â Martin ended up signing with the Buffalo Bills, who quite coincidentally, I’m sure, happen to play the Dolphins in Week 1.Â The Dolphins couldÂ quickly end upÂ regretting their decision.

*In a less surprising move, last year’s third-round pick, WR Patrick Turner, was released over the weekend and signed with the division-rival New York Jets.Â Â Undrafted rookies Marlon Moore and Roberto Wallace must have extremely impressive during practiceÂ for the team to keep them at Turner’s expense, because there isn’t a glaring difference in the preseason numbers.

Player

Rec

Yards

YPC

Long

TD

Marlon Moore

9

106

11.8

34

1

Roberto Wallace

8

101

12.6

31

1

Patrick Turner

5

90

18.0

34

0

Turner could revive his career with the Jets while playing alongside his former USC QB Mark Sanchez, but chances are slim after he couldn’t get on the fieldÂ last season and was beaten out by a pair of undrafted rookies in camp.

UPDATE: Yep, Turner has already been cut and is nowÂ on the Jets’ practice squad.Â Â So the Dolphins paid him a $714,000 signing bonus and $310,000 in salary to makeÂ zero regular season catches andÂ become aÂ practice squad player on a division rival a year later. Awesome.Â (more…)

With the NFL season right around the corner, and fantasy football drafts already in full-swing, it’s time to take a look at what to expect from theÂ Miami Dolphins’ skill players in 2010.Â Today, we’ll cover the quarterbacks and wide receivers, with running backs, tight ends, and the defenseÂ to be posted in the coming weeks.

Sorry, Penny!

Chad Henne, QB -Â All things considered, Henne had a solid 2009 after being thrown into the fire following Chad Pennington’s shoulder injury in Week 3.Â (As a sidenote, I still feel responsible for causing that to happen, because I spontaneously decided to pick up Henne in my fantasy league minutes before that game started).Â Henne completed 60.8% of his passes and had 12 TD passes in 14 games despite having one of the weaker WR corps in the league.Â He threw for over 300 yards in three of hisÂ last five games, andÂ should have no problem continuing that trendÂ with the Dolphins’Â acquisition of two-time Pro-Bowler Brandon Marshall.Â Â Considering that Kyle Orton threw for over 3,800 yards and 21 TDs last season with Marshall as his top receiver, HenneÂ could be in line for a spectacular year if he can improve his decision-making (10 INTs in the final six games).Â He’s a borderline number-one QB, andÂ has more potential than the likes of Donovan McNabb, Eli Manning, and Matt Ryan, all of whom are all Â being draftedÂ ahead of him in ESPN leagues.

Chad Pennington / Tyler Thigpen / Pat White, QBÂ – Unless you’re in a 14-team, two-QB league (likeÂ me), none of the Dolphins’ backups should be on your radar.Â Thigpen is likely to begin the year second on the officialÂ depth chart, though it wouldn’t be surprising if Miami turned to the veteran Pennington if Henne were to miss any games.Â White, who didn’t complete a single pass last year, is, um, still on the team as of this writing.

Brandon Marshall, WR – Marshall, who set the NFL record with 21 receptions to go along with 200 yards and two TDs in Week 14, will catch more passes by Week 3 than the Dolphins’ previous #19 did all year (38).Â The problem is that the volatile WR has been arrested at least four times on charges of assault, domestic violence, and DUI, and was suspended by the Denver Broncos for the final week of 2009 forÂ exaggerating an injury.Â Still, Marshall’s talents are undeniable — he’s caught over 100 passesÂ and totaled over 1,100 receiving yardsÂ in three straight seasons and has averaged the fourth-most receiving yards per game (80.7) in the NFL since 2007. His off-the-field problems, combined with playing for a new team and aÂ different offense,Â make him a somewhatÂ risky pick in the second round (currently being drafted 19th overall), butÂ you could talk me into taking MarshallÂ ahead of the aging Randy Moss and the Kurt Warner-less Larry Fitzgerald (especially in Point Per Reception leagues).Â

Davone Bess, WR – Bess had a fantastic sophomore campaign, leading the Dolphins in catches (76;Â 22nd in NFL), receiving yards (758), and punt return yards (209).Â Â Â His stats are bound to take a seriousÂ hit with Marshall firmly entrenched as the top receiver, but Bess should still get his fair share of targets out of the slot.Â Bess is a decent fourthÂ WR in PPR leagues with some upside, and at the very least, is a smart insurance policy if Marshall gets in Coach Sparano’s doghouse.

Brian Hartline, WR - Hartline led the Dolphins in TDs (3) and yards per catch (16.3; 11th in NFL) , and finished third on the team inÂ receiving yards (506) as a rookie.Â He dropped only three passes in 54 targets,Â Â and could end upÂ beingÂ theÂ beneficiary ofÂ Marshall’s double-teams if he wins the number two receiver spot in training camp.Â Still, with Bess expected to see more targets and Greg Camarillo also in the picture, HartlineÂ is only worth a late-round flier in standard leagues.

Greg Camarillo, WR - Camarillo, who should be fully recovered from a torn ACL he suffered in November 2008, was one of the most sure-handed receivers in the NFL last season,Â catchingÂ the highest number of passes without a drop and a stellar 70% of his total targets.Â He quietly placed second on the team in both receptions (50) and receiving yards (552) in 2009, butÂ stands to see aÂ reduced role behind the quicker and younger Hartline in 2010.